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X-Men: The Normative System Disguised as Mutant

Francesca Lopez (The Graduate Center, CUNY, USA)

Interdisciplinary Essays on Monsters and the Monstrous

ISBN: 978-1-80117-028-4, eISBN: 978-1-80117-027-7

Publication date: 20 October 2022

Abstract

X-Men is a movie franchise spanning 11 films centered on monsters and mutants (Braidotti, 1996), that is, the superheroes that appeared in the Marvel comics (Lauren Shuler Donner, 2000–2017). The franchise includes a rich compendium of male and female characters. Characters from both gender categories are gifted with powers and enjoy a remarkable focus from the plot. However, there are fewer female characters than male, and the former's powers are mainly related to the mind, rather than physical strength. If it is possible to immediately criticise the above-mentioned male focus, or the unequal distribution of powers, at the same time it is impossible to deny that both gender categories – male and female – reintroduce the gender binary that structures everyday reality in our current society (Butler, 2015). Such binary is a structural part of the cisgender and heteronormative system, inside which human beings carry out their existence. For these reasons, X-Men was interpreted by many transgender movements as a possible monstrous reclamation because it confers visibility to those bodies which are outside the norm (Preciado, 2020b) and it includes them in the context of a possible recognition as part of the cultural imaginary. This analysis, therefore, glimpses a possible liberation from the epistemological and material violence of the cisgender norm. This chapter will focus on the way in which the X-Men saga isn't faithful to a revolutionarily monstrous possibility, but rather carries out, through an apparatus of capture (Deleuze & Guattari, 2009), the reenactment of cis- and heteronormativity. In fact, those mutant and monstrous bodies represented here can be part of a highly popular franchise because they are part of the cisgender and heterosexual norm (Wittig, 1992) and because they put their monstrosity not outside the devices of power (Foucault, 2015), but at their service.

Keywords

Citation

Lopez, F. (2022), "X-Men: The Normative System Disguised as Mutant", Schotanus, M.S. (Ed.) Interdisciplinary Essays on Monsters and the Monstrous (Emerald Interdisciplinary Connexions), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 121-139. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-80117-027-720221008

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022 Francesca Lopez. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited